High-speed atomic force microscopy has proven to be a valuable tool for the study of biomolecular systems at the nanoscale. Expanding its application to larger biological specimens such as membranes or cells has, however, proven difficult, often requiring fundamental changes in the AFM instrument. Here we show a way to utilize conventional AFM instrumentation with minor alterations to perform high-speed AFM imaging with a large scan range. Using a two-actuator design with adapted control systems, a 130 x 130 x 5 mu m scanner with nearly 100 kHz open-loop small-signal Z-bandwidth is implemented. This allows for high-speed imaging of biologically relevant samples as well as high-speed measurements of nanomechanical surface properties. We demo...
Imaging of nano-sized particles and sample features is crucial in a variety of research fields. For ...
Nanotechnology is the branch of science which deals with the manipulation of matters at an extremely...
International audienceKeywords: High-speed atomic force microscopy High-speed force spectroscopy Mem...
This article describes fundamental devices and control techniques that have materialized high-speed ...
High-speed AFM imaging is important for many applications not least in biology where the ability to ...
High-speed atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM) has recently been established. The dynamic processes and...
AbstractAtomic force microscopy (AFM) is the type of scanning probe microscopy that is probably best...
Optical microscopy uses the interactions between light and materials to provide images of the micros...
Video-rate imaging and property sensing with nanoscale precision is a subject of immense interest to...
We designed and developed a high-speed atomic force microscope (HSAFM) utilizing a force-feedback sc...
Nanoscale morphological characterization and mechanical properties quantification of soft and biolog...
金沢大学理工研究域数物科学系The imaging rate of conventional atomic force microscopy (AFM) is too low to capture t...
金沢大学理工研究域数物科学系The atomic force microscope (AFM) has a unique capability of allowing the high-resolut...
金沢大学理学部The atomic force microscope (AFM) is a powerful tool for imaging biological molecules on a su...
High-speed atomic force microscopy (HSAFM) has enabled researchers to view the nanometer-scale dynam...
Imaging of nano-sized particles and sample features is crucial in a variety of research fields. For ...
Nanotechnology is the branch of science which deals with the manipulation of matters at an extremely...
International audienceKeywords: High-speed atomic force microscopy High-speed force spectroscopy Mem...
This article describes fundamental devices and control techniques that have materialized high-speed ...
High-speed AFM imaging is important for many applications not least in biology where the ability to ...
High-speed atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM) has recently been established. The dynamic processes and...
AbstractAtomic force microscopy (AFM) is the type of scanning probe microscopy that is probably best...
Optical microscopy uses the interactions between light and materials to provide images of the micros...
Video-rate imaging and property sensing with nanoscale precision is a subject of immense interest to...
We designed and developed a high-speed atomic force microscope (HSAFM) utilizing a force-feedback sc...
Nanoscale morphological characterization and mechanical properties quantification of soft and biolog...
金沢大学理工研究域数物科学系The imaging rate of conventional atomic force microscopy (AFM) is too low to capture t...
金沢大学理工研究域数物科学系The atomic force microscope (AFM) has a unique capability of allowing the high-resolut...
金沢大学理学部The atomic force microscope (AFM) is a powerful tool for imaging biological molecules on a su...
High-speed atomic force microscopy (HSAFM) has enabled researchers to view the nanometer-scale dynam...
Imaging of nano-sized particles and sample features is crucial in a variety of research fields. For ...
Nanotechnology is the branch of science which deals with the manipulation of matters at an extremely...
International audienceKeywords: High-speed atomic force microscopy High-speed force spectroscopy Mem...